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Running as non-root user¶
Deployers do not have to use root
user accounts on deploy or target hosts.
This approach works out of the box by leveraging Ansible privilege escalation.
Deploment hosts¶
You can avoid usage of the root
user on a deployment by following these
guidelines:
Clone OpenStack-Ansible repository to home user directory. It means, that instead of
/opt/openstack-ansible
repository will be in~/openstack-ansible
.Use custom path for
/etc/openstack_deploy
directory. You can place OpenStack-Ansible configuration directory inside user home directory. For that you will need to define the following environment variable:export OSA_CONFIG_DIR="${HOME}/openstack_deploy"
If you want to keep basic ansible logging, you need either to create
/openstack/log/ansible-logging/
directory and allow user to write there, or define the following environment variable:export ANSIBLE_LOG_PATH="${HOME}/ansible-logging/ansible.log"
Nota
You can also add the environment variable to
user.rc
file inside openstack_deploy folder (${OSA_CONFIG_DIR}/user.rc
).user.rc
file is sourced each time you runopenstack-ansible
binary.Initial bootstrap of OpenStack-Ansible using ./scripts/bootstrap-ansible.sh script still should be done either as the
root
user or escalate privileges usingsudo
orsu
.
Destination hosts¶
It is also possible to use non-root user for Ansible authentication on destination hosts. However, this user must be able to escalate privileges using Ansible privilege escalation.
Nota
You can add environment variables from that section to user.rc
file
inside openstack_deploy folder (${OSA_CONFIG_DIR}/user.rc
). user.rc
file is sourced each time you run openstack-ansible
binary.
There are also couple of additional things which you might want to consider:
Provide
--become
flag each time your run a playbook or ad-hoc command. Alternatively, you can define the following environment variable:export ANSIBLE_BECOME="True"
Override Ansible temporary path if LXC containers are used. The ansible connection from the physical host to the LXC container passes environment variables from the host. This means that Ansible attempts to use the same temporary folder in the LXC container as it would on the host, relative to the non-root user ${HOME} directory. This will not exist inside the container and another path must be used instead.
You can do that following in multiple ways:
Define
ansible_remote_tmp: /tmp
in user_variables.ymlDefine the following environment variable:
export ANSIBLE_LOCAL_TEMP="/tmp"
Define the user that will be used for for connections from the deploy host to the ansible target hosts. In case the user is the same for all hosts in your deployment, you can do it in one of following ways:
Define
ansible_user: <USER>
in user_variables.ymlDefine the following environment variable:
export ANSIBLE_REMOTE_USER="<USER>"
If the user differs from host to host, you can leverage group_vars or host_vars. More information on how to use that can be found in the overrides guide